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Monday, 20 June 2016

New meteorite 'Ost 65' to reveal origin of life on Earth

An ancient space rock in a Swedish quarry has been discovered by scientists. The new space rock is a type of meteorite which was never found before on the Earth and can shed more light on the evolution of life.

The new meteorite is called Ost 65 and appears to be from the missing partner in a massive asteroid collision 470 million years ago.

The collision sent debris falling to the Earth over about a million years and may have influenced a great diversification of life in the Ordovician Period which lasted almost 45 million years, beginning 488.3 million years ago and ending 443.7 million years ago.

One of the objects involved in this collision is well-known. It was the source of L-chondrites, the most common type of meteorite. But the identity of the object that hit it has been a mystery.

Qing-zhu Yin one of the scientists, professor of geochemistry and planetary sciences at University of California-Davis says, 'In our entire civilisation, we have collected over 50,000 meteorites and no one has seen anything like this one before'.

"Discovering a new type of meteorite is very, very exciting,” he further added in a paper reported in the journal Nature Communications.

Ost 65 was discovered in Sweden's Thorsberg quarry, source of more than 100 fossil meteorites.

Measuring just under four-inches wide, it looks like a gray cow patty plopped into a pristine layer of fossil-rich pink limestone.

By measuring how long Ost 65 was exposed to cosmic rays, the team established that it travelled in space for about a million years before it fell to the Earth 470 million years ago.

This timeline matches up with L-chondrite meteorites found in the quarry.

According to the researchers, about 100 times as many meteorites slammed into the Earth during the Ordovician Period compared with today owing to the massive collision in the asteroid belt.

This rain of meteorites may have opened new environmental niches for organisms, thus boosting both the diversity and complexity of life on Earth.

"I think this shows the interconnectedness of the entire solar system in space and time, that a random collision 470 million years ago in the asteroid belt, could dictate the evolutionary path of species here on Earth," Yin explained.